Instructions for Replicating the Findings in �A Price for Peace�

1. Download all replication files
2. Open the code and data files in R
3. Load all libraries, install first if not already installed
4. Run the script (corresponding tables and figures are indicated in script)

Data sources: 
Troop and all personnel commitment-related variables- 
International Peace Institute. 2017. IPI Peacekeeping Database. www.ipinst.org/providing-for-peacekeeping-database

Troop and personnel fatalities- 
Henke, Marina E. 2019. ``UN Fatalities 1948�2015: A New Dataset.'' Conflict Management and Peace Science 36(4): 425-442.

Pivotal aid- 
Boutton, Andrew, and Vito D�Orazio. 2020. ``Buying Blue Helmets: The Role of Foreign Aid in the Construction of UN Peacekeeping Missions.'' Journal of Peace Research 57(2): 312-328.

Contiguity- 
Stinnett, Douglas M., Jaroslav Tir, Paul F. Diehl, Philip Schafer, and Charles Gochman. 2002. ``The Correlates of War (COW) Project Direct Contiguity Data, Version 3.0.'' Conflict Management and Peace Science 19(2): 59-67.

GDP- 
World Bank. 2017. World Development Indicators database. wdi.worldbank.org

Democracy- 
Marshall, Monty G. and Ted Robert Gurr. 2020.``POLITY5: Political Regime Characteristics and Transitions, 1800-2018.'' Center for Systemic Peace.

Battle-related deaths-
Sundberg, Ralph, and Erik Melander. 2013. �Introducing the UCDP Georeferenced Event Dataset.� \emph{Journal of Peace Research}, 50(4): 523-532.

Refugees- 
Marbach, Moritz. 2018. ``On Imputing UNHCR data.'' Research & Politics 5(4). DOI: 10.1177/2053168018803239.

Minimum distance- 
Weidmann, Nils B., Doreen Kuse, and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch. 2010. ``The Geography of the International System: The CShapes Dataset.'' International Interactions 36(1): 86-106.


